President Clinton Announces New Patient Protections For Children And
Urges Congress To Do Its Part To Pass a Strong, Enforceable Patients'

Bill of Rights
October 2, 1999

In his weekly radio address today, President Clinton will announce that
the Department of Health and Human Services is releasing a proposed rule
this month that extends key patient protections to the Children's Health
Insurance Program. Extending these rights to CHIP ensures that all
Federal health insurance programs - collectively covering over 85
million Americans - are coming into compliance, to the fullest extent of
the law, with the Patients' Bill of Rights. The President will also
praise the enactment of strong patient protections in California this
week. But he will underscore that in spite of this progress, Congress
must act to ensure that all Americans in all plans have the patient
protections they need.

THE ADMINISTRATION IS DOING ITS PART WITH NEW, STRONG PATIENT
PROTECTIONS FOR CHILDREN. President Clinton will announce today that
the Department of Health and Human Services will release a proposed
regulation later this month extending critical patient protections to
every child enrolled in CHIP. This new program, in combination with
Medicaid, is expected to cover up to 5 million uninsured children. It
will be required to ensure that all participating plans include: access
to needed health care specialists; access to emergency room services
when and where the need arises; assurances that doctors and patients can
openly discuss treatment options; and access to a fair, unbiased, and
timely appeals process to address health plan grievances.

CALIFORNIA IS SETTING AN EXAMPLE WITH ITS NEW PATIENT PROTECTIONS. The
President will praise the state of California for moving ahead as the
Congress stalls by enacting a bipartisan, strong, enforceable law that
extends new protections to over 20 million people. This new law
establishes an independent medical review system for patients to dispute
claims when their treatment has been delayed, denied or modified by
their health plan; provides enrollees with a fair, unbiased, internal
and external appeals process; and allows patients harmed by health plan
decisions to hold the plans accountable in the courts.

WE STILL NEED STRONG FEDERAL LEGISLATION. Despite these steps forward on
patients' rights, tens of millions of Americans still lack basic
protections, and more needs to be done to assure that all Americans in
all health plans get the quality care they need and deserve. Because
state jurisdiction does not cover self insured plans covering millions
of Americans, Federal law may be interpreted to preempt state laws in
many areas including enforcement and external appeals, and because few
states have passed comprehensive protections, there can be no uniformity
of these protections until and unless Federal legislation is enacted.

CONGRESS IS MOVING IN THE WRONG DIRECTION. The House Labor
Appropriations bill, despite strong opposition by the Administration and
Congressional Democrats, includes a provision that would prevent the
Department of Labor from issuing regulations giving 120 million
employees the right to a timely and effective internal appeal of any
coverage decision that denies them care they were promised.

CONGRESS SHOULD PASS A STRONG, ENFORCEABLE PATIENTS BILL OF RIGHTS.
Next week, Congress will begin debate on patients' protections. Noting
that the Norwood-Dingell Patients' Bill of Rights already has a
bipartisan majority in the House, the President will urge the Republican
leadership to commit to a fair, up-or-down vote on this legislation -
and not to load it up with provisions that weaken its strong protections
and threaten the bipartisan support it has already achieved. Unlike the
partisan Senate-passed bill, this bill covers all Americans in all
plans, provides real patient protections (access to specialists,
continuity of care protections, emergency room protections), and holds
plans accountable when they do harm to patients. It is supported by the
American Medical Association and over 300 health care and consumer
organizations. The President will encourage the Congress to act
constructively to protect the right of Americans nationwide.

BUILDING ON STRONG ADMINISTRATION RECORD OF PROTECTING PATIENTS' RIGHTS.
President Clinton has a long history of promoting patients' rights, and
he has already used his authority to make many of these rights real for
the 85 million Americans who get their health care through federal
plans: Medicare and Medicaid, the Federal Employees Health Benefits
Plan, the Department of Defense and the Veterans Administration -- and
now, CHIP. The Administration's record on patients' rights includes:

Appointing a Quality Commission to examine potential quality concerns
in the changing health care industry. In 1996, the President created a
non-partisan, broad-based Commission on Quality and charged them with
developing a patients' bill of rights.

Challenging Congress to Pass a Patients' Bill of Rights. In October
1997, the President accepted the Commission's recommendation that all
health plans should provide strong patient protections, and he called
on Congress to pass a strong enforceable patients' bill of rights. He
also called on Congress to make passing the patients' bill of rights a
top priority in his 1998 and 1999 State of the Union Addresses.

Extending Critical Patient Protections to All Federal Health Plans.
In February 1998, the President directed the Federal health plans,
covering 85 million Americans, to implement the patients' bill of
rights. Over the next year, the Administration took critical steps to
meet this goal. The Office of Personnel Management notified its 285
health plans that they needed to implement patient protections in order
to participate in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan. The
Health Care Financing Administration issued an interim final regulation
to implement patient protections for older Americans and people with
disabilities covered by Medicare. The President also announced a
proposed rule to bring the Medicaid program into compliance with these
protections.